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Canada Communicable Disease Report (CCDR) from the Public Health Agency of Canada
Updated: 54 min 24 sec ago

Canada Communicable Disease Report (CCDR) weekly - September, 2010 - Volume 3 - Issue 34

Fri, 09/03/2010 - 02:00
From 1999 through 2005 in Alcoi, Spain, incidence of legionellosis was continually high. Over the next 4 years, incidence was lower, but an increase in July 2009 led health authorities to declare an epidemic outbreak.
Categories: Canada

Canada Communicable Disease Report (CCDR) weekly - August 27, 2010 - Volume 3 - Issue 33

Fri, 08/27/2010 - 10:30
After heptavalent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV7) was marketed in France, Spain, Belgium, and England and Wales (United Kingdom), invasive disease from non-PCV7 serotypes (NVT) increased.
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Canada Communicable Disease Report (CCDR) weekly - August 20, 2010 - Volume 3 - Issue 32

Fri, 08/20/2010 - 02:30
CDC researchers identified 1,097 foodborne disease outbreaks, which lead to 21,244 illnesses and 18 deaths, in the United States during 2007. Although Salmonella and norovirus were the most common culprits for both outbreaks and illnesses, these numbers were down 8% and 15% from the annual average reported from 2002 to 2006.
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Canada Communicable Disease Report (CCDR) weekly - August 13, 2010 - Volume 3 - Issue 31

Fri, 08/13/2010 - 03:00
Published in a leading journal this week, a large genome study of meningitis and septicaemia suggests genetic differences could be why some people are more susceptible and others naturally resistant to these diseases.
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Canada Communicable Disease Report (CCDR) weekly - August 6, 2010 - Volume 3 - Issue 30

Fri, 08/06/2010 - 03:15
Eastern Africa is free of polio again, with four countries - Ethiopia , Kenya, Sudan and Uganda - having reported no cases of the crippling disease for more than a year, U.N. and other aid agencies said. The WHO said the region had responded fast to the outbreak.
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Canada Communicable Disease Report (CCDR) weekly - July 30, 2010 - Volume 3 - Issue 29

Fri, 07/30/2010 - 14:45
Effective tuberculosis control is compromised by a lack of clarity about the timeframe of viable Mycobacterium tuberculosis shedding after treatment initiation under programmatic conditions. This study quantifies time to conversion from smear and culture positivity to negativity in unselected tuberculosis patients receiving standardized therapy in a directly observed therapy short-course (DOTS) program.
Categories: Canada